1–2“Veni Creator Spiritus” etc. / “Qui [diceris] Paraclitus” etc. A liturgical hymn, ascribed to Rabanus Maurus (ninth century), which was often sung in Gregorian chant. It is typically performed to celebrate the feast of Pentecost. The first line is “Veni Creator Spiritus”; the second phrase, “Qui [diceris] Paraclitus,” opens the second stanza.

2“Gloria in excelsis [Deo].” Another hymn or prayer of the mass. Elsewhere in quire 15, it appears in French (art. 102).

¶ Whoever each day during sixty days will say thirty times “Come, Creator Spirit”etc. [and] “Comforter, to thee we cry” etc., thirty times “Glory be to God on high,”and thirty times “Out of the depths” [Psalm 129], the prayer that he makes directly to God will never fail.

1–2“Veni Creator Spiritus” etc. / “Qui [diceris] Paraclitus” etc. A liturgical hymn, ascribed to Rabanus Maurus (ninth century), which was often sung in Gregorian chant. It is typically performed to celebrate the feast of Pentecost. The first line is “Veni Creator Spiritus”; the second phrase, “Qui [diceris] Paraclitus,” opens the second stanza.

2“Gloria in excelsis [Deo].” Another hymn or prayer of the mass. Elsewhere in quire 15, it appears in French (art. 102).

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